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Last Chance to Receive Our July August Issue
 

 July/August Issue Out Now

 

This is your last chance to subscribe to Foreign Affairs and receive our July/August issue.

Your subscriber benefits include the following:

  • Six issues available in Print, Audio, PDF, EPUB, and MOBI formats
  • Unlimited access to new articles and audio
  • Access to the Foreign Affairs app (iOS and Android)
  • Over a century of archives online
  • Our subscriber-only newsletter
Last Chance to Receive Our July/August Issue
 

July/August Issue Out Now

 

This is your last chance to subscribe to Foreign Affairs and receive our July/August issue.

Your subscriber benefits include the following:

  • Six issues available in Print, Audio, PDF, EPUB, and MOBI formats
  • Unlimited access to new articles and audio
  • Access to the Foreign Affairs app (iOS and Android)
  • Over a century of archives online
  • Our subscriber-only newsletter
 

Don't miss the July/August 2023 issue's special package on the war in Ukraine. This timely series explores where the war is headed and potential paths to an endgame, including Andrea Kendall-Taylor and Erica Frantz on the future of Putin’s regime, Margaret MacMillan on the lessons of World War I, and Radek Sikorski on European security. The issue also covers:

  • Why today’s autocracies are more resilient than they seem
  • How inequality and economic malaise fuel democratic decay
  • Why the U.S.-Indian relationship is growing more complicated, and more.
 
 
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Global Equality and Its Discontents

Branko Milanovic explores the decline in global inequality and its repercussions.

The Real Origins of the Border Crisis

Julia Preston examines the broken asylum system at the heart of the U.S. migrant crisis.

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Why the World Still Needs Trade

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala makes a case for reimagining globalization rather than abandoning it.

China Is Ready for a World of Disorder

Mark Leonard argues that Beijing is betting on the failure of the global order—and explains why that gamble might pay off.

Image
Image

Global Equality and Its Discontents

Branko Milanovic explores the decline in global inequality and its repercussions.

Image

The Real Origins of the Border Crisis

Julia Preston examines the broken asylum system at the heart of the U.S. migrant crisis.

Image

Why the World Still Needs Trade

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala makes a case for reimagining globalization rather than abandoning it.

Image

China Is Ready for a World of Disorder

Mark Leonard argues that Beijing is betting on the failure of the global order—and explains why that gamble might pay off.

 
 

Books & Reviews

 

Branigan expertly documents both the power and the frailty of memory in the face of an unrelenting campaign by the Chinese Communist Party to bend and twist people’s recollections of the Cultural Revolution into whatever shapes best suit the CCP in the present, writes Mary Gallagher.

 
 

Books & Reviews

 

Branigan expertly documents both the power and the frailty of memory in the face of an unrelenting campaign by the Chinese Communist Party to bend and twist people’s recollections of the Cultural Revolution into whatever shapes best suit the CCP in the present, writes Mary Gallagher.

 

Subscribe today to access the full issue, plus full access to new and archival content, audio editions, and The Backstory, our subscriber-only newsletter.


Sincerely,

The Team at Foreign Affairs

 

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Link to the article ''There’s No Such Thing as a Great Power''

There’s No Such Thing as a Great Power

How a Dated Concept Distorts Geopolitics

Phillips P. O'Brien

Link to the article ''Russia's New Time of Troubles''

Russia’s New Time of Troubles

It’s Not 1917 in Moscow—It’s 1604

Vladislav Zubok

Link to the article ''The High Price of Dollar Dominance''

The High Price of Dollar Dominance

The Dollar Is the Worst Reserve Currency—Except for All the Rest

Michael Pettis

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